5 Questions for Attorney General Sessions

In advance of Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ testimony on Wednesday, October 18 before the Senate Judiciary Committee, non-partisan watchdog group American Oversight called on senators to pose the following questions to Sessions:

You changed DOJ policy to require prosecutors to pursue “the most serious, readily provable offense” in every case. Is Special Counsel Mueller bound by this policy? Does the policy apply to individuals who intentionally omit legally required information on their SF-86 security clearance forms?

In explaining why you omitted contacts with Russian officials on your security clearance form, you claim to have received guidance from the FBI instructing you to do so. Did you receive that instruction personally, or was it received by a member of your staff? Do you have documentation of this guidance and will you share it with Congress and the public?

To what extent has the Department of Justice worked with attorneys for the Trump Organization to defend the president against charges that he is in violation of the Emoluments Clause, for example to assure DOJ lawyers that payments to Mr. Trump’s businesses are in fact market rate transactions?

Multiple reports have indicated that senior White House officials, including Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, have used personal email accounts for government business. Has the Department of Justice taken steps to investigate this matter and those involved, such as securing their server and reviewing the information on it for potentially classified information?

What steps has the Department of Justice taken to investigate affirmative action practices in college admissions? Beyond Harvard University, are there any active probes into other institutions?

“With so many questions surrounding his personal conduct, his management of the Department of Justice, and his adherence to equal justice under the law, there has never been more important time for the Senate to get answers from Attorney General Sessions under oath,” said American Oversight Executive Director Austin Evers. “From the administration’s use of personal email accounts, to blatant misrepresentations on security clearances, and swirling questions about Russia’s influence, the American people demand – and deserve – the truth.”